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Stuart Neville - Stolen Souls: A Jack Lennon Investigation Set in Northern Ireland

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Stuart Neville Stolen Souls: A Jack Lennon Investigation Set in Northern Ireland

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Galya Petrova travels to Ireland on a promise that she will work for a nice Russian family, teaching their children English. Instead, she is dragged into the world of modern slavery, sold to a Belfast brothel, and held there against her will. She escapes at a terrible costthe slaying of one of her captorsand takes refuge with a man who offers his help. As the traffickers she fled scour the city for her, seeking revenge for their fallen comrade, Galya faces an even greater danger: her savior is not what he seems. She is not the first trafficked girl to have crossed his threshold, and she must fight to avoid their fate. Detective Inspector Jack Lennon wants a quiet Christmas with his daughter, but when an apparent turf war between rival gangs leaves bodies across the city, he knows he wont get it. As he digs deeper into the case, he realizes an escaped prostitute is the cause of the violence, and soon he is locked in a deadly race with two very different killers.

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First published in the United States in 2011 Soho Press Inc 853 Broadway New - photo 1

First published in the United States in 2011 Soho Press Inc 853 Broadway New - photo 2

First published in the United States in 2011 Soho Press Inc 853 Broadway New - photo 3

First published in the United States in 2011
Soho Press, Inc.
853 Broadway
New York, NY 10003

All rights reserved.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Neville, Stuart, 1972
Stolen souls / Stuart Neville.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-56947-983-4
eISBN: 978-1-56947-984-1
1. WomenNorthern IrelandFiction. 2. Human trafficking
Fiction. 3. GangstersFiction. 4. Serial murderFiction.
5. DetectivesFiction. I. Title.
PR6114.E943S76 2011
823.92dc22
2011019610

Printed in the United States of America

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Contents

For Jo, and
everything to come

PART ONE
GALYA

B LOOD HOT ON her hands. Red. The brightest red Galya had ever seen. Her mind tilted, her vision disappearing down a black tunnel.

No, dont faint.

She gasped, pulled air in, and with it a copper smell that went to her stomach and grabbed it like a fist. Bile rose to her throat. She swallowed.

The mans legs shook as she tried to withdraw the shard of glass, a strip of bed sheet wrapped around one end to form a grip for the improvised knife. She jerked. His eyes gaped. She twisted, feeling the glass grind against a hardness deep inside his neck until something snapped. The blade slipped free of the new mouth it had opened beneath his chin. Red bubbled from it and spread across his Lithuania football shirt, swamping the bright yellow.

Galya stepped back as the blood advanced across the linoleum flooring toward her bare feet. It licked at her toes, warm kisses from the dying man who slid down the wall as his eyes dimmed.

A scream rushed up from her belly, but she clamped her free hand over mouth, trapped it behind her teeth. The hand was slick on her lips, and then she tasted it.

Galyas gut flexed, and vomit streamed between her fingers. Her legs dissolved. The floor came at her like a train. She sprawled in the wetness and the heat, tried to scramble away from it, but it was too slippery against her bare skin.

The scream came again, and this time she could not hold it back. Even though she knew it would kill her, Galya let it burst free, a terrified bird escaping from the cage of her chest. The howl dragged every last swallow of air from her lungs. She inhaled, coughed, breathed in again, brought her mind back under control.

Galya listened through the rushing in her ears.

Silence, save for the choked bubbling from the mans throat. Then a knock on the bedroom door. Tears came to her eyes, frightened little girl tears, but she blinked them away. She was not a little girl, hadnt been since Papa died almost a decade ago.

Think, think, think.

The glass blade still rested in her bloodied fingers, the tip missing, the rag grip soaked through. Maybe she could keep them back. They would see their dead friend and know she could do the same to them.

Another knock, louder. The door handle rattled.

Tomas?

Fear cut through her. No, she could not keep them back with this piece of glass. Again, the urge to weep. She pushed it away once more.

Tomas? The voice slurred out some more words. She knew a little Lithuanian, but not enough to understand the drunken questions coming from the other side of the door.

You all right in there? Another voice, the English spoken with the hard twang of this strange, cold place. Dont be leaving any marks on that girl.

How many were there? Galya had listened to the voices as they arrived. Two spoke Lithuanian. One of whom now lay beside her on the floor. The other English with an accent strong enough for her to hear he was Irish. One of the two brothers, she thought. After a week of listening to their conversations through the locked door, she had learned one was named Mark, the other Sam. Only one of them was here tonight.

Tomas? A fist hammered the wood. Listen, stop fucking about in there. Im going to kick this door in if you dont come and open it.

Galya got to her knees, then up on her feet, the air chilling the wetness on her stomach and thighs. The plain gray sweatshirt and pair of jogging bottoms theyd given her lay on the dressing table. She grabbed them, juggled the glass from hand to hand as she pulled them on, feeling the fabric stick to the blood. Foolish, perhaps, but she felt safer clothed.

The door rattled with each thump. The other Lithuanian cursed beyond it.

Fucks sake, the Irishman said.

Galya blinked as the door jerked in its frame, the noise booming in the bedroom. She backed toward the corner, gripping the glass knife in front of her. Another boom, and the light bulb swayed on its cord above her head. She wedged herself into the angle where the two walls met. The glass quivered in front of her eyes.

She prayed to her grandmother, the woman who had always protected her and her brother, ever since they had been orphaned. The old woman had been Mama to them for as long as Galya could remember. Now Mama lay in the ground hundreds of miles away where she could no longer give protection. Galya prayed to Mamas departed soul, even though she did not believe in such things. She prayed that Mama would look down on her granddaughter and take pity, Ohplease Mama, come down and take me away please Mama oh pl

The door burst inward, slammed against the wall and bounced back. The Lithuanian blocked it with his shoulder as he entered. The Irishman followed. They stopped when they saw the dead man.

The Lithuanian made the sign of the cross.

The Irishman said, Fuck me.

Galya shrank into the corner, made herself as small as she could, as if they wouldnt see her cowering there.

The Lithuanian cursed and shook his head, his eyes watering. He rubbed his big hand across his lips.

Jesus, Darius, the Irishman asked, is he dead?

Look like yes, Darius said.

What do we do?

Darius shook his head. Dont know.

Sam, she was sure this was Sam, said, Fuck me.

We all dead, Darius said.

What?

Arturas, the Lithuanian said. He kill us both. You brother also.

Sam said, But we didnt

No matter. We all dead. He pointed a thick finger to the corner. Cause of her.

Sam turned to look at Galya. She raised the glass blade, cut the air in front of her.

Why you do this thing? Darius asked, his face slack with despair.

She hissed, the glass sweeping in an arc at his eye level.

Dont waste your breath, Sam said. She doesnt speak English.

Galya understood every word. She choked back a giggle at the deception, felt her mind flutter like a flag in the wind, ready to tear itself free. For a moment she thought she might let it go, let insanity carry her away, but Mama had not raised her to give in so easily. She bared her teeth and showed them the blade again.

What are we going to do? Sam asked.

Get rid him, the Lithuanian said.

Sams eyes brightened. What, dump him?

We say Arturas, you brother come here, take her out of this place, no come back. Arturas ask where go, we say we know nothing.

Will he believe us? Sam asked.

The Lithuanian shrugged. We say real thing, we dead. Arturas dont believe, we dead also. What different?

Sam nodded to the corner. What about her?

What you think? the Lithuanian said.

Sam blinked and stared at him.

Go. The Lithuanian stepped aside. Take

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